On Thursday 09 May 2013 21:09, Peter Percival conveyed the following to
comp.os.linux.misc...
> I am the proud owner of an Acer Aspire A5-4 notebook running Windows
> 7, and I have a broadband internet connection. May I download
> some-Linux-or-other, burn it on to a CD to use on my note book, _and_
> on an elderly Windows XP computer?
Yes, you can do that, but bear in mind that there are 32-bit
distributions and 64-bit distributions. A 32-bit system will work on a
64-bit machine, but not vice versa. ;-)
That said, a CD is probably not going to cover it all. Most
distributions come as DVD images these days. As other posters have told
you, you must burn the DVD /from/ the image, not put the image on the
disk. Typically your burning software will have an option "burn from
ISO" or "burn as raw data" or something of the likes. That's the option
you need.
> Even if I can't use the same CD on both machines, I would like to try
> it on the notebook.
Well, several distributions come as installable live CD/DVDs, which
means that you can already try out the system without needing to install
anything on your hard disk at all, as the system will run off the CD/DVD
drive. This will of course be rather slow compared to a hard disk
installation, but it should be enough to let you look around and play
with it.
> I know nothing about Linux or computers in general, so recommendations
> of which Linux to download will be gratefully received.
Many here have advised you Ubuntu or Mint - Mint is actually an Ubuntu
derivative - and while both may be "easy" for beginners, the downside of
them is that they also /keep you trapped/ in that beginner stage,
because they obfuscate the full experience.
I would therefore recommend something else, and in my experience,
PCLinuxOS would be a good starting point. It comes as an installable
live CD/DVD - a 64-bit version is available, and although still marked
experimental (by PCLinuxOS), it works rather well. PCLinuxOS is an
offshoot of Mandriva, which is a professional-quality distribution.
Many GNU/Linux distributions these days come in separate versions
depending on the graphical user interface you wish to use - this
includes the Ubuntu and Mint distributions - but this "segregation"
gives newbies the wrong impression of the system, because you can
install multiple graphical user interfaces side by side on the same
GNU/Linux installation and alternate between them, or have one user
account use one GUI and another user account use another GUI. You can
even log in twice on separate virtual consoles - GNU/Linux is a UNIX-
style operating system and is thus a multi-user system - and start
different GUIs in each of them.
The most commonly used GUIs these days are GNOME 3, KDE 4, XFCE, LXDE,
Cinnamon and MATE. The latter two are attempting to continue the look
and feel of GNOME 2. MATE does this by building upon the GTK2 libraries
that GNOME 2 was built against, Cinnamon in turn does it by using the
GTK3 libraries of GNOME 3 and providing in essence a wrapper around
GNOME 3.
Ubuntu's Unity interface is also a wrapper around GNOME 3 but has a
different look and feel to it (with some MacIntosh-inspired aspects),
which not everyone is happy about - it was actually designed for
netbooks and tablets, but Canonical, the organization behind Ubuntu,
then chose to make it the default for /all/ installations. Ubuntu is
either way to be shunned because it now officially contains spyware and
adware, courtesy of Canonical's deal with
amazon.com. The
spyware/adware can be removed, but a newbie won't know where to look,
and they shouldn't have to be obligated to do that in the first place.
So stay away from Ubuntu. ;-)
KDE 4 comes with a very Windows-like look and feel "out of the box", but
is highly configurable and customizable, and can be made to look (and
feel) completely different. LXDE and XFCE are also rather Windows-like
in their look and feel.
Another thing to keep in mind is that the equivalent of the Windows
Administrator account is called "root" in UNIX operating systems, but
you should /never/ log in as root to do any normal work. Ubuntu and
derivatives like Mint even prevent you from doing that by "sabotaging"
the root account. You should either way always create a normal,
unprivileged user account for your daily work, and use that one.
UNIX is also not a mono-culture like Microsoft Windows. It's in essence
one big toolbox, and if you're not happy about the look and feel of a
particular tool, then there are always alternatives. So, to give you an
example, there are dozens of web browsers, e-mail clients, Usenet
newsreaders, file managers, CD/DVD burning applications, multimedia
players, et al. And you can install them all - well, most of them
anyway - side by side, and pick the one you like best.
You should also not be worried about viruses or about setting up a
firewall. UNIX systems only listen on ports you explicitly opened (by
having a service listen on them) and will silently drop anything else,
and the mechanisms of propagation of viruses in Windows won't work in
UNIX because the system is organized entirely differently. For
instance, in UNIX, nothing is executable unless it is stored on a
filesystem and given execute permission for the user trying to execute
it. So e-mail attachments and the likes are by definition not
executable.
Yet another thing is that there are no drive letters. In UNIX, there is
only a single, unified and uniform directory hierarchy, and additional
volumes simply get "mounted" onto directories in the tree. Should you
decide to install it on your machine, then you'll need to create at
least two partitions: a root filesystem for the system itself, and a
designated swap partition (which does not have a filesystem on it). It
is however advisable that you would also create a third partition for
the contents of /home. That way, your personal files will be kept
separate from the rest of the system, should you ever need to reinstall
or upgrade, and/or format the root filesystem. If you choose to create
this additional partition during installation, then it will
automatically be mounted on the directory /home when the system boots.
All GNU/Linux systems come with documentation. The graphical user
interfaces run on top of the system as a graphical wrapper the way
Windows 3.x and older used to run on top of DOS, so the underlying
system is all made up of command line utilities, and for most part,
anything you do in the GUI will be using those very command line
utilities in the background.
Each of those utilities has a manual, called a man page, but this is
rather tricky for newbies. There should however be ample documentation
installed in HTML form under /usr/share/doc. Much of that HTML
information may be outdated, but then again it is not actually meant as
a tutorial. There is also lots of (more or less dated) information
available in the form of HowTos and Guides at...
http://www.tldp.org
Another site you may wish to bookmark is...
http://www.linuxnewbies.org
Usenet is also a good place for finding help, but you need a thick skin.
Some regulars will scoff at anyone posting to a GNU/Linux newsgroup from
a Windows newsreader - even though most Windows newsreaders can also be
run in GNU/Linux by way of WINE, a Windows compatibility ABI for UNIX
systems. Certain newsgroups are also ridden with Win-trolls - some of
whom may actually be on Microsoft's payroll - and they will do anything
to reel the newbies in over to their camp. Several newsgroups have
already been ruined by such trolls, including alt.os.linux.ubuntu (and
alt.os.linux.mint isn't far behind, as the same trolls are camping there
as well). So there's another reason why _not_ to use Ubuntu or Mint. :p
In the end, GNU/Linux is all about choice and freedom. One man's
favorite distribution will be scoffed and mocked by another man. You'll
just have to find the distro that works right for you, and there are
/many/ really good ones out there: Mageia, PCLinuxOS, openSUSE, Debian,
Slackware, Arch, et al. But Slack and Arch require you to get your
hands dirty early on in the game, so those are not really newbie-
friendly.
Bottom line, I think you should start with PCLinuxOS. You can always
switch to another distribution later if that's what you want.
Think it through. Not just what I wrote here above, but also what the
other posters said. Let it all sink in. Then pick one and give it a
try. If you don't like it, pick another one. There are plenty to
choose from, and they're not costing you any money. (Hint: I use
rewritable optical media, so I can always recycle any CDs/DVDs I've
burned.)
Welcome to GNU/Linux. Your entire computing experience is about to
change very drastically. And you'll be loving it. :-)
--
= Aragorn =
GNU/Linux user #223157 -
http://www.linuxcounter.net